Red Flags in Therapy: What to look out for

Mar 11, 2026 | Dr. Paulette Didia, Insights, Therapy

Red Flags in Therapy

Starting therapy often brings hope, vulnerability, and uncertainty. People often wonder whether discomfort is part of the process or a sign that something is not right. While therapy can feel challenging at times, there are clear indicators or red flags in therapy that suggest the therapeutic relationship may not be supportive or ethical.

The Red Flags

One important red flag is feeling consistently dismissed or misunderstood. A therapist should remain curious about your experience, even when they disagree or need clarification. If your concerns are minimized, rushed, or repeatedly reframed in ways that do not resonate with you, the work can lose its grounding. Over time, feeling unseen can undermine trust and slow progress.

Another red flag involves unclear or inconsistent boundaries. Therapy relies on professional structure to support emotional safety. Therapists should start and end sessions on time, maintain appropriate self-disclosure, and avoid dual relationships. When boundaries are blurred, clients often feel confused, pressured, or emotionally responsible for the therapist.

Notice how your therapist delivers feedback. Effective therapy can include challenge, but it should never feel shaming, coercive, or judgmental. Statements that make you feel small, defective, or dependent are not therapeutic and can interfere with growth. Therapy works best when clients feel supported enough to reflect, not when they feel corrected or controlled.

A therapist who discourages questions or avoids collaboration can also be a concern. Therapy is a collaborative process, and works best when clients are active participants. You should feel comfortable asking about treatment goals, approaches, or progress. Resistance to transparency or an insistence that the therapist knows best can reinforce unhealthy power dynamics.

Finally, trust your internal cues. If you feel anxious before every session, guarded about sharing, or worse after sessions without understanding why, those reactions matter. Discomfort that leads to insight is different from discomfort that leads to self-doubt or emotional withdrawal.

Healthy therapy is respectful, structured, and responsive, even when it is challenging. Not every therapist will be the right fit, and that’s okay. Recognizing red flags in therapy is not a failure. It is an important step toward advocating for care that truly supports your well-being.

Smiling headshot of a professional female therapist wearing a black blazer and white shirt, posed against a neutral gray background—representing Making Meaning Psychology, a warm and approachable mental health practice in New York.

Author Bio:

Dr. Paulette Didia is a licensed psychologist based in New York, specializing in helping clients navigate anxiety, boundaries, and life transitions. She takes a collaborative, practical approach to therapy, empowering individuals to understand themselves, build resilience, and live with greater clarity and calm. Contact Dr. Didia today to schedule a free consultation and learn how she can support your journey. Contact: Admin@makingmeaningpsychology.com